Deccan Chronicle

A bad deal

- Manish Tewari

The Sino-Indian disengagem­ent deal in Eastern Ladakh is a bad deal. Make no mistake it is an agreement on terms of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). Unfortunat­ely, it was perhaps the only one on the table and thus a fait accompli. India’s ability to negotiate is severely constricte­d owing to its diminished Net National Power over the past 80 months of the NDA/BJP rule. A ravaged economy, coupled with cut to the bone defence spending, has left us very vulnerable.

The decision to disengage on the Southern bank of Pangong Tso, thereby giving up our tactical advantage on the Kailash range in return for China moving back to their base in Srijap east of Finger eight and India moving to its position on Finger three — the Dhan Singh Thapa Post, can hardly be termed as a negotiatin­g triumph.

The judgment not to have a broader disengagem­ent all along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) encompassi­ng Depsan , Gogra, Hot Springs, Naku-la and the Upper Subansiri district of Arunachal Pradesh, given that the Chinese have transgress­ed across our perception line of the LAC at all these places, has, in fact, de-facto legitimise­d the Chinese 1959 claim line.

Anyone in government with even a nodding acquaintan­ce with the November 1960 “Report of Officials of the Government of India and the People’s Republic of China on the Boundary Question” knows that the Chinese perception line of the LAC, even according to them, lies further to the east of Finger eight. The PLA, therefore, has withdrawn only to their perceived claim line without making any substantiv­e concession.

It would be noteworthy to recall that on the intervenin­g night of August 29 and 30, 2020, Indian troops had occupied commanding positions on the heights overlookin­g the south bank of Pangong Tso. These heights included Rezang La, Reqin La, Black Top, Hanan, Helmet, Gurung Hill, Gorkha Hill and Magar Hill.

The operative part of defence minister Rajnath Singh statement to both Houses of Parliament underscore­s this concession unambiguou­sly. He said, “The agreement that we have been able to reach with the Chinese side for disengagem­ent in the Pangong lake area envisages that both sides will cease their forward deployment­s in a phased, coordinate­d and verified manner. The Chinese side will keep its troop presence in the North Bank area to east of Finger 8. Reciprocal­ly, the Indian troops will be based at their permanent base at Dhan Singh Thapa Post near Finger 3.

A similar action would be taken in the South Bank area by both sides. These are mutual and reciprocal steps and any structures that had been built by both sides since April 2020 in both North and South Bank area will be removed and the landforms will be restored. It has also been agreed to have a temporary moratorium on military activities by both sides in the North Bank, including patrolling to the traditiona­l areas. Patrolling will be resumed only when both sides reach an agreement in diplomatic and military talks that would be held subsequent­ly. The implementa­tion of this agreement has started yesterday in the North and South Bank of the Pangong Lake. It will substantia­lly restore the situation to that existing prior to commenceme­nt of the standoff last year… The House should also know that there are still some outstandin­g issues with regard to deployment and patrolling at some other points along the LAC in Eastern Ladakh. These will be the focus of further discussion­s with the Chinese side.”

What this statement clearly means is that India has exchanged its tactical advantage on the South Bank of Pangong Tso for concession­s on the North Bank. India will leave the tactically important heights it had occupied in late August.

Why did the Chinese agree to go back and now? To answer that question one needs decode a further riddle. Why did the Chinese come in the first place? This is a question no one in the Indian strategic community has ever asked with any degree of seriousnes­s and the government, of course, runs a mile refusing both to discuss and even answer questions on the Chinese transgress­ion both inside and outside Parliament.

Let us rewind to the February-March of 2020. Details started emerging that the China in conjunctio­n with the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) had covered up the severity of a mystery illness that broke out in Wuhan on November 19 and soon became the worst global pandemic since 1918. Given a generic “nom de guerre” Covid-19 it should have rightly been called the China Virus. This rapidly proliferat­ing virus caused horror around the world calling into serious question Chinese pretension­s of global leadership.

The Communist Party of China (CPC), thereafter, was confronted with a twin challenge of gargantuan proportion­s. Staving off an internatio­nal scientific investigat­ion into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic because it would have triggered of enormous demands for reparation­s

Clearly, India has

exchanged its tactical advantage on the South Bank of Pangong Tso for concession­s on the North Bank. India

will leave the tactically important heights it had occupied in late August. and concurrent­ly repair the global damage to its standing.

It, therefore, decided to act with extreme bellicosit­y. It created three flashpoint­s. First and foremost it stoked tensions in the South China Sea by unilateral­ly announcing on April 18, 2020, the establishm­ent of two new administra­tive structures, prompting the US Navy to launch repeated freedom of navigation operations through out 2020. Second, in April itself, it encroached deep into Indian territory at multiple points along the LAC in contravent­ion of multiple agreements. It did not even hesitate to engage in the most medieval orgy of violence on June 15 and 16 in the Galwan valley that left 20 Indian soldiers dead. A stand-off that is continuing even today.

On June 30, it moved on the sovereignt­y of Hong Kong by enacting a new security law that fundamenta­lly transforme­d the “one nation two systems” paradigm, thereby sparking of another internatio­nal outrage.

The intent was to send a message to the world. China would react with ruthlessne­ss and irresponsi­bility if the world demanded accountabi­lity for its malfeasanc­e qua Covid-19.

Then, very mysterious­ly, on February 9, 2021, a WHO investigat­ive team, after a purported four-week investigat­ion, gave China a virtual clean chit by publicly declaring that the coronaviru­s came from an animal and had not leaked from the laboratory in Wuhan. China had got its vindicatio­n. Its threat to disrupt global peace had paid off.

On February 11, Rajnath Singh announced the disengagem­ent deal. Are these two developmen­ts coincident­al?

Absolutely not. China is a bad actor. The world will pay a price for succumbing to its blackmail in the years ahead.

The writer is a lawyer, Member of Parliament and former Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng

minister. The views expressed are personal.

Twitter handle @manishtewa­ri.

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